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โ€˜A ghost townโ€™: How Bodega Bay is adapting to the ailing seafood industry

April 30, 2025 โ€” From the living room window of their waterfront home, Carol and Tony Anello have watched the rise and fall of Bodega Bay. Traffic on Westshore Road flows past in waves, fishing boats pull into the docks and throngs of visitors line up at Spud Point Crab Co., their restaurant next door. Launched more than 20 years ago and known for its chowder and Dungeness crab rolls, the restaurant has helped make the Anellos beacons of the community.

It has also served as a life raft as they left the commercial fishing business.

โ€œI had a premonition that the fishing industry was going down,โ€ said Tony Anello, who fished commercially for salmon, crab and herring for 54 years before selling his boat Anabelle last year. โ€œThere are guys dropping out of this industry like flies, and Iโ€™m one of them.โ€

At Bodega Bay and other picturesque seaside villages along the California coast, the fishing economy is gradually sinking.

The latest blows came earlier this month: Commercial harvest of Chinook salmon was banned in California for the third consecutive year because of low populations, and the stateโ€™s Dungeness crab fishery has been severely restricted in an effort to protect humpback whales from entanglements. Sportfishing for salmon โ€” a valuable industry and a beloved pastime โ€” also was prohibited for two straight years, and will be severely cut back this year to what may amount to a single weekend in June in Northern California.

Read the full story at CalMatters

CALIFORNIA: San Francisco area crabbers end holdout, move to โ€œorganized startโ€

January 12, 2021 โ€” First came whales, then came a price most West Coast Dungeness crabbers deemed too low to fish for, but after nearly two months of having their gear at the ready, San Francisco area fishermen finally set their pots Monday, 11 January, at 8 a.m. They will begin hauling on Wednesday, 13 January, at the same time, under an โ€œorganized startโ€ โ€“ agreed to by fleets out of Half Moon Bay, San Francisco, and Bodega Bay โ€“ to prevent a mad dash, shotgun start once a price had been agreed to.

โ€œHoly Christ has this season been a mess,โ€ Dick Ogg, who runs the F/V Karen Jeanne out of Bodega Bay, said. โ€œBut the fleet has really come together. If this works, which it looks like it will, it will be pretty amazing and will have a lasting imprint on the fleet.โ€

Read the full story at Seafood Source

North Bay crabbers caught in price battle with wholesalers

December 23, 2020 โ€” Eggnog? Check. Chestnuts roasting on an open fire? Sure, if youโ€™re into that. But donโ€™t bet on landing any Dungeness crab this holiday season.

โ€œUnless a miracle happens, which is highly unlikely, we wonโ€™t see crab for Christmas,โ€ said Tony Anello, a veteran fisher who runs his boat, the Annabelle, out of Bodega Bay and offers up his tender product at Spud Point Crab Co.

After several years of varied setbacks and more than a month of delays to the 2020 Dungeness season, local crabbers now face a new hurdle as they haggle over price with large wholesalers. The California Department of Fish and Wildlife had reset the seasonโ€™s start date to Wednesday, offering a glimmer of hope to those who have made fresh crab part of their annual holiday ritual. But few boats were heading out to set traps on Tuesday.

โ€œWe should be traveling right now,โ€ Dick Ogg, another icon of the local Dungeness harvest, said Monday from behind a shopping cart at Costco. โ€œIโ€™m here grabbing stuff in case something happens this afternoon. We would normally anchor up, set up all the bait cups and be ready. Then (Tuesday), right at 6:01 (a.m.), weโ€™d start setting gear.โ€

But Monday did not bring resolution. At 3 p.m. that day, representatives of the major fishing ports in Northern California spoke by phone with executives of Pacific Seafood, one of the Westโ€™s largest seafood wholesalers. A couple hours later, the company engaged in a separate call with a wider range of fishers stretching up the Oregon coast.

Read the full story at The Press Democrat

BEN PLATT: Close to Home: Ropeless fishing gear wonโ€™t save whales

October 27, 2020 โ€” If you live in one of Californiaโ€™s historic fishing communities like Bodega Bay, youโ€™ve probably heard the term โ€œropelessโ€ crab fishing gear. Thatโ€™s the new buzzword for equipment being promoted by environmental groups to solve the perceived problem of whale interactions with fishing gear.

These groups have convinced the California Department of Fish and Wildlife to adopt onerous new regulations that will force crab fishermen to adopt expensive, impractical and unproven fishing gear that will put most of us out of business. It will economically devastate โ€” to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars annually โ€” many coastal communities that rely on the fishing and seafood industry. And unfortunately, these regulations are set to go into effect on Sunday.

But the action these environmental groups are promoting isnโ€™t based on the best available science. In fact, it isnโ€™t based on any science or data at all. They claim that the number of deaths of humpback whales caused by entanglements are now high enough for the population to slip into decline.

The truth, however, is something different.

Whale population numbers are soaring. John Calambokidis and Jay Barlow from the Cascadia Research Collective, a respected marine mammal study center, recently released a report titled โ€œUpdate on blue and humpback whale abundances using data through 2018.โ€ The researchers concluded that current estimates for the California-Oregon humpback whale population is 5,612 and 1,593 for the Washington-Southern British Columbia humpback whale population. This results in a new estimate totaling 7,205 for the California-Oregon-Washington humpback stock. This figure shows that whales are abundant and not in danger. Itโ€™s far higher than the previously thought 3,500 figure.

Read the full story at The Press Democrat

Central California Dungeness opens, but Northwest awaits 2020

December 13, 2019 โ€” With the danger of whale entanglements eased, the Dungeness crab season for central California will open Sunday. But lackluster meat quality led Northwest state fisheries manager to delay opening other coastal areas until the New Year.

Officials from California, Oregon and Washington state wildlife agencies conferred Dec. 6 and agreed on the delay, citing meat recovery values still below 25 percent in areas on the northern coast. The continuing closure will remain in effect from Point Arena, Calif., north to the Canadian border, โ€œthrough December 3, 2019 at least,โ€ according to a joint statement issued through the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.

Testing protocols specify season delays for any area where sampled crabs do not meet the minimum standards for meat recovery, with additional testing before a new opening date can be set. The state agencies are sampling again in mid-December with an eye to having complete results Dec. 20.

Itโ€™s a rocky start to the beginning of the winter fishery that has had more than its share of problems, from domoic acid to marine mammal conflicts. The California opener originally set for Nov. 22 was delayed, after the Bodega Bay crabbing fleet voted to voluntarily hold back from deploying their gear until a large number of endangered humpback whales had finished feeding in their nearshore zone.

Read the full story at National Fisherman

CALIFORNIA: Fishermen Reeling After Lawsuit Brings Early Closure to Crab Season

April 11, 2019 โ€” Bay Area crab fishermen were racing to haul in their crab traps following the settlement of a lawsuit that is shutting down the commercial dungeness crab season nearly two months early.

Crab season, which opens in November and normally runs until the end of June, is shutting down April 15th as part of a settlement aimed at reducing the number of whale entanglements in crab gear. The settlement follows a lawsuit filed by the environmental group Center For Biological Diversity targeting the State of California over an increase in entanglements.

โ€œWeโ€™ve always believed there were common sense solutions to this problem,โ€ said Steve Jones, spokesman for CBD, โ€œand we feel by working with the state and the crabbers weโ€™ve found one in this case.โ€

Fishermen said they were blind-sided by the settlement, getting notice of the early shutdown only two weeks before the deadline. Earlier this week in the fishing hamlet of Bodega Bay on the Sonoma Coast, boats filled with crab traps pulled in to the docks to unload their traps.

Read the full story at NBC Los Angeles

Tough Seasons for California Crabbers

August 31, 2016 โ€” The recent crab season in California was abysmal, to say the least.

Epic neurotoxin levels found in Dungeness and rock crabs forced state officials to close fisheries for months instead of weeks, crippling one of the stateโ€™s most lucrative fishing industries and leaving fishermen in Californiaโ€™s Northern and Central coasts unable to make a living.

Boats loaded with new fishing gear and crab pots sat in harbors such as Bodega Bay and Monterey. Boat owners have had to lay off crewmembers, who left to find work elsewhere or collect unemployment.

In Crescent City, a small Northern California town of fewer than 8,000 people, the community has been hosting fundraisers to help struggling crabbers. The city has one of the largest landings for Dungeness crab.

Angel Cincotta, who owns the Alioto-Lazio Fish Company on San Franciscoโ€™s Fishermanโ€™s Wharf with her two sisters, told an NBC Bay Area affiliate that they have had to assuage customersโ€™ concerns about the product they were selling.

โ€œCrabs are currently coming out of Washington and Alaska, out of certified clean waters, so theyโ€™re safe to eat,โ€ she told NBC.

The neurotoxin also affected rock crab season in Santa Barbara, one of the stateโ€™s biggest ports for rock crab fishing. The rock crab season, which runs all year, was delayed for months in Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties.

โ€œThousands of Californians are dependent on healthy a crab fishery, and this year we have faced a disaster,โ€ said State Sen. Mike McGuire, chairman of the Joint Committee on Fisheries and Aquaculture. โ€œOur magnificent and iconic crab fishery has gone from abundant to scarcity. And after a lousy salmon season, our fishery boats sit idle. Crabbers are struggling to make ends meet.โ€

Read the full story at Fishermenโ€™s News

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